Not sure if that would help , I'm sure via GPO I can deny creation of them, however, how do I stop MSIExec from kicking off? I think it will make it worse because then MSI will kickoff, and appsense will say "no no no you cant"
Jean-Paul Natola Subject: Re: [NTSysADM] MSIEXEC CPU on TS To: ntsysadm@lists.myitforum.com From: kz2...@googlemail.com Date: Tue, 20 Aug 2013 21:31:43 +0000 If you're desperate to solve this, AppSense Environment Manager can do it by ensuring that the reg keys can't exist, period. But you'd have to license it. Cheers, JR Sent from my Blackberry, which may be an antique but delivers email RELIABLYFrom: J- P <jnat...@hotmail.com> Sender: listsadmin@lists.myitforum.comDate: Tue, 20 Aug 2013 17:29:34 -0400To: ntsysadm@lists.myitforum.com<ntsysadm@lists.myitforum.com>ReplyTo: ntsysadm@lists.myitforum.com Subject: RE: [NTSysADM] MSIEXEC CPU on TS on the TS box itself- I guess disabling MSIExec wouldn't help either I'm up to 27 new guids in the last hour Jean-Paul Natola From: dani...@hotmail.com To: ntsysadm@lists.myitforum.com Subject: Re: [NTSysADM] MSIEXEC CPU on TS Date: Tue, 20 Aug 2013 16:21:07 -0500 Is it enumerating printers local to the TS server or the workstation? From: J- P Sent: Tuesday, August 20, 2013 4:13 PM To: ntsysadm@lists.myitforum.com Subject: RE: [NTSysADM] MSIEXEC CPU on TS I get that, the issue is that when a user logs into TS, the minute they try to print or print preview their first job (its a report from Access ) - MSIExec hits 100% till the keys get enumerated, during that time ,everyone on TS feels it and you know how it is to just watch the hour glass 3-4 minutes seems like an eternity to the user waiting for it. Can I just disable the server from even attempting to enumerate, the option of upgrading to a new OS is not really viable at the moment. Jean-Paul Natola From: ken.corne...@kimball.com To: ntsysadm@lists.myitforum.com Date: Tue, 20 Aug 2013 17:00:15 -0400 Subject: RE: [NTSysADM] MSIEXEC CPU on TS Just put the GP in place and relax. You can’t manually get rid of them – they just keep coming back. From: listsad...@lists.myitforum.com [mailto:listsad...@lists.myitforum.com] On Behalf Of J- P Sent: Tuesday, August 20, 2013 4:56 PM To: ntsysadm@lists.myitforum.com Subject: RE: [NTSysADM] MSIEXEC CPU on TS I did a manual delete of the hP key, and sure enough after logging into to the TS when I went to do a "pdf preview" it hung for about 4 minutes- and then about 11 new keys showed up I'm open to options , users dont actually need to print over TS, but they do require print preview for the PDF's they email- ROCK> me < HARD PLACE open to all suggestions thanks From: jnat...@hotmail.com To: ntsysadm@lists.myitforum.com Subject: RE: [NTSysADM] MSIEXEC CPU on TS Date: Tue, 20 Aug 2013 15:54:06 -0400 Yes they are in HP gazillion Can you share your policy, did it delete before or after user logon/off And more importantly did it prevent MSIEXEC from shooting to 100 during a new logon? THANKS SO MUCH Jean-Paul Natola From: ken.corne...@kimball.com To: ntsysadm@lists.myitforum.com Date: Tue, 20 Aug 2013 15:49:47 -0400 Subject: RE: [NTSysADM] MSIEXEC CPU on TS IIRC, my problem is HP printers and they create gazillions of keys under HKU\.Default\Software\HewlettPackard. I simply created a group policy object that deletes the whole HKU\.Default\Software\HewlettPackard key. From: listsad...@lists.myitforum.com [mailto:listsad...@lists.myitforum.com] On Behalf Of J- P Sent: Monday, August 19, 2013 4:21 PM To: ntsysadm@lists.myitforum.com Subject: [NTSysADM] MSIEXEC CPU on TS I realize this is has been around for a while, but it seems that there still has not been an actual fix for this, so i am asking if anyone has had any successful work-arounds, besides upgrading the server http://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/windowsserver/en-US/c16e01d6-4b64-4dad-ba8f-479c9fea85c0/high-cpu-usage-in-msiexec-due-to-enumeration-of-print-guids-in-hkudefaultsoftware I literally have thousands of these guids on the TS Environment, 2008 32 bit TS with Citrix fundamentals Any thoughts are appreciated